
Hornbill/Crocodile Mask (Primary Title)
Unknown (Artist)
Nuna artists show great originality in making masks, and their forms are often borrowed by the neighboring Bwa. In this exciting composition, the crocodile hovers above the head of the hornbill, revealing the artist’s creativity and mastery of wood-carving. The rope network tied to the mask is used to attach a voluminous raffia costume that completely conceals the dancer, as seen in the adjacent photograph.
Woodward, Richard B. African Art: Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. Richmond, Virginia: Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, 2000. (p. 64-65)
Richard B. Woodward, African Art (Richmond, VA: Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, 1994) pp. 64-65, ills.
Roy, Christopher. Art of the Upper Volta Rivers. Meudon, France: Alain et Francoise Chaffin, 1987. (illus. 183, p.223)
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